New Britain Herald Newspaper, June 23, 1915, Page 4

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) IS psented By a CLASS CO. \T THE i NEPTUNE'S DAUGHTER AT FOX'S FRIDAY In presenting Annette Kellerman, the perfect-woman in the spectacular pictorial production “Neptune’s Daughter” the producing company has reason to believe that it has utterefd Theatre ay Night 20 on sale at eum Box Thursday ? SAND GRAY ers u;d' Dancers - YOUR YOUR- SWEET- Should all see. ‘CORA’ "and’ compelling. y lnd happiness about by a brave ' AND SATURDAY advance in prices. “Eve. 10. 20, ART IN NEW BRITAIN | e to register. Clay - Modelling, - limited, on to every student. § each week for cost ten dollars, A few more jo complete the class. WISELTIER, 92 Garden St. ~concern - is. i detail in a life of strenuous effort to a0, 503 Class now ' Courses in Drawing, Paint- ete. | insuring individual Three six' weeks. including | students M. to °Mzs !or sheils ANNETTE/KELLERMAN. the last word in photo-play art. “Nep- tune’s Daughter” was produced at a cost of $50,000 and was three months in preparation. Its success in New York has been' sensational. Never before have the newspapers of New York devoted so much attention to or bestowed as much praise on a film production. -'Neptune’'s Daughter” is coming to Fox's for a return engage- ment this Friday and Saturday. and Judging from the talk heard about town capacity business'is in store for this popular playhouse during the en- gagement. LIFE OF “CORA” IS ABSORBING STUDY | | Fighting for her honor in the grasp of a vicious man, a guest at her own table, who takes advantage of tho dispersing of the guests at the Bo- hemian party, to make her the vic- tim of his desires, is one of the thrill- ihg moments that confronts *“Cora,” the singer, and leading role in the screen drama “Cora,” in which the gifted young actress Miss Emily Ste- vens appears in at Fox's today and tomorrow.” She is finally succored by the man she dearly loves, but not | before she has killed the man who at- tacked her, by - hitting him _ with a wine cooler near a window, the impact throwing ‘him off his. balance. .He is seen to fall to the pavement below and is picked up dead. Every littie be good and love decently, finally crowned with the joy and happiness | brought about by a brave soul con- quering every obstable that has beset her, is portrayed vividly, even thrill- ing, so much so that this drama is absorbing, tense and rivets attention as few screen dramas have done be- fore. Besides this excellent and com- pelling drama the latest chapter of “The Romance of Elaine,” will also be shawn. These concluding chap- ters of the Elaine’s exploits tell how she gains her peace and happiness after her many desperate dangers. Wateh the coming chapters and see {the final triumph of Elaine as the closing of her tribulations are draw- ing to a close. MARY PICKFORD IN KEENEY PHOTO PLAY Mary Pickford, the popular motion picture artist, will be seen in “Mis< tress Nell,” the big photo play se- lected as a special attraction for Kee- ney’s tonight. The drama in pie- turized form is furnished by the Fa- mous Players company under the di- rection of which Miss Pickford worked before the camera. The clever little woman has a splendid part in the piece and the title role affords her innu- merable opportunities to display her { talents, Miss Pickford is supported | | by some capable people in the play ,and the acting of thc entire cast is of high caliber. Capacity houses should be the rule on Thursday and Friday when Har- old MacGrath’s great novel, “The Car- pet of Bagdad” will be shown in its screen form. This remarkable tale has been widely read. A glance through the pages of the book at once shows the great chances for elabor- ateness in producing it in motion pic- {ures. The Lubin people havt taken advantage of every opportunity and as i a result the story is told with a wealth | of picturesque detail and a dramatic | style that makes a most favorable im- pression. At every performance during the warm weather the management plans to have some big photo-drama for a | | special attraction. During the sum.. | i mer a great deal of attention will be | paid to mation pictures and it is an- | nounced that films from the Famous Players and the¢ Big Four combine | will be shown regularly. In addition | fthere will be Charley Chapiln photo comedies and the régular daily re- leases. All this will be in addition to the regular vaudeville show. The' price | of admission Wwill remain the same, although the show will ‘cost nearly twice as much as it has in the past. +The vaudeville entertainers this week include the Colonial trio, operatic singers; Jack Davis and Mazie Wil- 1 | terided the greectings of the-day. lodges, 1. O. O. F., of deceased members in Fairview cem- etery yesterday and held memorial ex- | milk may l)e the means of saving | old, so that some additional foed will Vews for Theatre Goers and Women Readers [ Menu for Tomorrow || F2shion Hinls by May Manton’ “QVER THE WIRE” | Breakfast. Sliced Pineapple. Fried Mush Maple Syrup Bacon Rolls Crecam Scones Tunch Devilled Ham Sandwiches Steamed Custard Tea Dinner, Broiled Fish Mashed Potatoes Scalloped Tomatoes Léttuce French Dressing Ginger Mousse Iced Coffee Coffee Cream Scones—Sift one and ome- | half cupfuls fiour into a basin, ad1q one teaspoonful sugar and ome tea- spoonful baking powder. Rub in ona | heaping tablespoonful butter, then | make into soft paste with- some cream, Divide it in two. pieces, Take one piece and roll it out quite thin | and -round, then roll out the second piece and cut them into eight pieccs, Lay them on hot griddle and bake them for five ‘minutes, turning them once. Ginger spoonful tablespoonfuls Mousse.—Dissolvé one tea- powdered gelatine in four water, add ' one-half cupful sugar. and boil ten minufes, ; then pour slowly upon the beaten . whites of two eggs, beat till cold, | then fold in one cupful whipped cream, add one-half cupful chopped | preserved ginger. and turn into a melon mold. Pack in ice and salt for four hours. Serve with sauce made with the ginger syrup slightly thickened. 8661 Shirred Dress for Misses and Small Women, 16 and 18 years. i Hereisa pretty, dainty altegether mos attractive little dress that requires almos no labor for the making. The skirt, bodice and the sleeves are alfmzde from flouncy ing, therefore there are no edges to be finished, no trimming to be applied. Herej the material is bordered voile and the ‘center portions of the bodice are of hand} kerchief lawn; a very dain?’ and pretty contrast, but this model could lace if a dancing frock is wanted or ‘it could be used for embroidered batiste or embroidered crépe, embroidered tafieta | or for anx other material that makes its own finish.,' If bordered material is not w desired, plain edgesalways can be trimmed and finished. l’\zm taffeta with bands of velvet ribben raduating width would make an exceedingly hafdsome dress, the sewing of the trimming would mean a little added labor, but not a great | amount. If long sleeves are wanted, thcy can be gathered into cuffs. The sknrt is in three sections, joined at the shirrings and there is a bocince lining which holds all the parts in place. For the 16 year size will be required 3 yds. of flouncing 27 in. wide and 2 yds. 13 in. wide, with 134 yds. of material 27 in. wnde, 114 yds, i;b or 44 in. wnde, or, o}{ yds. of material 27 in. w 4 yds. 414 yds. 44 in. wide; the wxdt‘L of the \rt at the lower edge is 3 vds. The pattern 8661 18 cut in sizes for 16 and 18 years, It will be mailed to any address by the Fashi>n Department of this paper, on receipt of ten cents. Ewents Tonight Moving pictures, Fox’s theater. Vaudevville and ' moving pictures, Keeney's theater. K0, TEMS Valiant tent, 821 '1-2 Main street. Elks’ carnival, Elks ington street. home, Wash- Class night, - New Britain school. High St. Elmo lodge, K. of P., 242 Main street. 7 Stanley pest, G. A. R., G. A. R, hall, Andre lTodge, Vega hall. MANY BIRTHDAY MESSAGES. Scores of telegrams, letters, post cards and other congratulatory mes- sages poured in pn Commander Fred- crick V. Streeter at his home on South Main street vesterday in henor of his geventy-second birthasy. iast even- ing he was visited by a large number ¢f his Grand Army comrades who ex- Stella Rebekah and Unity Rebekah decorated graftes Miss Lillian Brady and Miss F/hoes Hannon attended the senlor promen- ade of the High school of Commerce, Springfield, Monday evening in the | Springfield municipal auditorium, Mothers Warned Not to Wean Babies In_Summer. if Possible to Avoid It ercises there. Mrs, H. A. Thayer was marshall of one section and Mrs. George F. Henn of the ather. i If Necessary It Should Be Done Gmdually——lnfanté Should Be Given Time to Get Used to New Food, Says U. S. Department of Labor. “Prepared for ‘‘Herald” by Chil- dren’s Bureau, U. S. Department of Labor.” Weaning is t he process by which feeding is stopped and another food given in its place. It should be done gradually. At first give one -bottle instead of one of the breast feedings; after a week or two add another bot- tle and then continuc adding them | until bottle feedings are:entirely sub- stituted for the breast. Never hurry the weaning. Give the ! baby tithe to getused to the new food. When it is agreeing with his | digestion, there is mo belching of gas or spitting up of milk, and the bowel movements are soft, yellow and smooth. TIf any disturbance appears, stop the bottle until it is over, giving enly the breast milk. Never Weaned in Summer, A baby should never be weaned in the heat of summer if it is possible to avoid it. He is much more likely to be made sick by a . strange food when the weather is hot than at othex times of the year. Even if the ba has to be fed partly on the botile the motlier should nurse him often enough (three or four time a day) to keep the breast milk from drying up; for if the baby should be at- tacked by diarrhea, tne mother breast milk lesséns in quantity, it does not change in quality. By the addition of a bottle or two, there- fore, the deficient quantity can be made up. Cause Dangerous Iliness, These improper foods cause trouble- scme, dangerous and unnecessary ill- nesses, which are aggravated by the heat. Careful feeding would pre- vent most of them. Later articles in this series will deal with the feeding of babies from nine to twelve months, and during the sec- ond year. Trouble With Quantity. When a breast-fed baby cries a goad deal from hunger, and does not gain 'in weight, the mother s apt to feel that her milk does not agree with him, and so means him, often because neighbor. This is a mistake. The trouble is not with the quality of her milk, but with the quantity. Instead of weaning the should increase her own diet, by i drinking plenty of milk, eating eggs, meat, bread and fresh vegetables, and by taking moderate exercise in the open air, regular periods of rest, and by avoiding worry and excitement. 1 This will usually increase the milk supply sufficientl, if it does not do 80, the baby must be given some ad- ditional fcod. Use Cow's Milk. This additional food, or “'supplemen- tary” feeding, as has been said, is | glven when it is necessary to supple- ment the mother’s milk with one or more bottle feedings, ar for the p . pose of weaning the baby. Cows' milk is the only supplementary food to use, 1t should be the best and cleanest milk that it is possible (o ‘met, mixed with water and sugar as degeribed in the preceding article. A very much weaker solution than baby she 5 life, Seme mothers are able to ‘nurvsae ¢ their babies a full year, but many find that their milk begins to fail by | the time thc baby is 6 or 8 months be required. Practically all babics should be entirely weaned.from tie | breast by the time they are a year old, unless that brings the weaning in' hot weather. Nursed 'Through Summer. Babies born in the Ilate summer or eariy fall should be nursed through the following summer, if the breast liams in an entertaining rural sketch; The Dawsonss sihgers; and Nichols and l’!‘roy mnnrs and comedians. that normally required for a baby of the given &{e; should be tried at first, mcrea“in! he strength slightly day niflk is. sufficient in quantity, in ors der to carry thém past the («danger peridd in July and August. When be used for of the well.meaning advice of some | * DOROTHY CLARKE. T've . just this minute breakfast 1 know it's fectly scandalous hour, but | every dance last night a - per~ 1 danced wasn't - |1t a success though? i You sec tiie evening wrap that Gladys i was wearing? the coat part 5 is of pale chiffon lined with vio- | let satin there are no sleeves ;\ut a cape caught at the shoulde by a ribbon of black velvet falls nearly to the wrist just above the cape rises a wired silver lace frill .. the collar is of ermine have you ever seen such a fur season? and she was carrying a muff. I know it doesn’t sound like summer but it was only of pale blue chiffon and lace with a broad band of vio- lets and roses, and right in the centre underneath the flowers is a sort of pocket to carry powder and all sorts of things . 1 do wish you had no- ticed it by day if the baby shows no signs until the full strength of indigestion, feod is reached. To begin with bottle feeding in feeding. If he shows a | \veight, this may be enough. {ter a week there is no gain, two bot- tles may be given each day. niother should all she can by rest and increased food | {to build up the breast milk, but if !with all these measures the baby stil: !falls to gain or gives evidence of ill- ness, the advice of a good docter must | be sought and followed. Do not de- ilay in securing this advice until the baby is seriously ill. Mothers May Secure Bulletin. The preceding article gave diréc. tions for the proper amount of milk | mixture for babjes or given ages. If the mother, desires fuller information she may write to the Children’s Bureau of the U: 8. Department of Labor, at Washington, D.. C:; for a bulletin called Infant Care, which gives sim- ple directions for preparing the baby’s feedings and shows what amount will suit the baby of a given age. This book is sent freé ta everyone who asks for it. A post card request will do. The name and the address of the applicant should be written very plainly. Weaning from the bottle should be- gin by the end of the first year, and after the baby is 14 months old he should have the bottle only when he goes to bed at night. Teach him to drink from a cup and eat from a spoon. To wean a baby from the bottle, begin by giving him a little of his food from a spoéh,’gradually increas- ing the ambount at each feeding umn- til all of his’fo@ ‘is [taken: in this way. UNCLE TOM'S CABIN POPULAR THAN EVER give the baby gain Time brings hardships * “Uncle Tom's Cabin,” ten by Mrs. Harriet Beecher Stowe of | this city and regarded as one of the | most powerful stories éver written. As a play, it is even more popular now than ever, as is evidéenced at Poli's theater this week, where the Poli Players are presenting the old favor- ite before audiences that tax the ca- pacity of the theater. A souvenir matinee far the children was held this afternoon and appropriate gifts were given out to the vounger patrons. All the familiar characters of the play no upon the story writ- finished ons place of one breast; in 1t af-| The | meanwhile be doing’| Simply Say “Charge It” Ladies’ Spring| Suits $15 And the Values are up to $42.50 This announcement means ¢lean sweep of every spring suit 4p our store at this one startling money saving price. Buits in this displey that sold as high as $42.50—many carried the price of $32.50. COMPLETE SHOWING OF SUM- ! MER SUITS, $1.98 to 81495, | New suits that show exclusive points of style in genuine Pabn Beach Cloth (with label) Pan- ama Cloth and others. A cha¥m- ing array of shades. | 98¢ and $1.98 Hats that are becoming and extremely stylish tor present wear in the city and at t he shore. THE GesAR MiscH STORE 687695 MAIN STREET HARTFORD Exceptional values in pretiy wash dresses. TheStoryoquown My neightor, like Flora McFlimsey, has nothing to wear. “What,” said I (like Flora’s interlocutor,) “has become of t Pr blue crepe?”’ ! A .2 “Mercy,” said she, “that's so indecently scant, I can't move it “You could last year,” said I 1 smiled, “I know it,” said she. “Isn't it funny? It really looks about un big as it did last year to me, and all because I'm seeing wide ekirts. 1 style the queerest thing that ever was?" And T agree. We know that it is absurd to cease to admire an attractive, begomi gown because the lines are different from the lines the gratest numbr people are wearing today. But somehow we just can’t make our eyes sec as they saw it yesterday. And yet thc gown changed & particle. It Jjust as becoming, just as attractive. Look at Your Picture Taken Ten Yeurs Ago, Look at a picture of yourself tz ken tem years ago. Do you rememb how you loved that gown? Do you remember the day you brought home, how smart you thought it was and how graceful? And today ho ridiculous and awkward that gown looks. It does not seem fo you ne ‘that you could ever have felt well-dressed in it . The history 9! a single gown—what a runze of emotions and nuno it would contain. Start from the day the idea of the gown was first conceived. “ fore it was materialized as an actual gown it had a big place in o thoughts. The cut, the color schenie, the lines, how much thought v put into them! And then there were the delicious hours in the shops wh you coquetted with one possibility and another and finally de | choice and came home elated, and then, in the reaction ch weariness made Iinevitable, regretted your decision and almost Oubd t] whole business, P ’ e W. S Sodas W & ._'..m‘ PSS While You Affected To W . And then the day when the gown arrived from the shop or the maker and after trying it on and permitiing all the family to a took .out the satin covered, sweet scented Christmas present hamgar. hung the gown in the best clothes press. There it hung for a few until you took it out to show your next friend, pretending to her hink much of it, while all the time you felt in your heart thut it was prettiest dress in the town. e Next came the first day you wore it. What a «sense of power. s self-possession it gave you! How much more wittily and easily than U vou talked! They who say that beautyis only skin deep should rémem that the health of the skin is the health of the body. Y] The Paths of Story Lead to the Rag Bag. ¥ ' How long it was before the best dropped back into seécond best 4 pended on the length of something else—your purse, Sooner or later, he ever. its freshness wore off, perhaps something defaced it, familiarty b contempt, and a new gown usurped ‘its place on the best hanger. By by you wore it on minor occasions and no longer felt dressed up when put it on. Perhaps it got a second wind from making over but e the paths of glory led in the inevitable direction. The rag bag or the ¢ ity bag yawned for the prey and recelved it minus any salvagable portip| which were to appear later in a reincarnation. 4 The story of a gown—sordid in some wa full of vanity, and with its big movements and its romance, After all, much time and mo: as we would save, one can’t quite wish we were born with our clothes like our dumb friends, A are retained in the version used by the Poli Players, which is, inciden- tally, different from the one which is used by the rcad companies. 1t is a high grade dramatic production and is exactly the same as the all-star version which William A. Brady dared to present on Broadway a few vears ago and which scored such a hit. Scen- jieally it a production worth see- ing. All the favorites are seen in stirring roles. Next week, the Playvers wm be seen {in “The Girl Out Yander” a suc- ! cessful play written by Pauline Phelps and Marion Short. Miss Phelps is a resident of Farmington and is well known locally. The play is based upon incidents in Cape Cod life that are said o pulsate with life. The last meeting of the séason be- fore the summer vacation of Martha chapter, No. 21, 0. B. 8., will be held tomerretw evening. The play which was to be given has been postponed. l l Jnowski, Mary Czykier, Mary D Josephine Gryczke, Anna Gill jca Juchniewicz Mary Kotowska, rence Luty, Helen Przybylo, Sta lava Skarcznska, Josephine Topa, § SACRED HEART SCHOOL, Graduation exercises were held this afternoon at the Sacred Heart parochial school. Gold medals for scholarship were presented to Jose- phine Juchniewicz and Jullan Pas. The graduates are: Stanley Demailn, John Gaj, Alexander Jaksine, John Kato, Albert Kostrzewa, Josepy Luty, Czoslaus Marut Rudolph Niwa, Jos- eph Klewicki, John Kostrzewa, lian Pac, Vaclaus Przjalkow; Wiadislaus Elysz, Tgnatius Wisk, Stanislava Bednarszyk Florence Bo- HORLICK’S The Original MAL‘I‘ID MILK 8§ b

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